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Jeff August 11th, 2005 11:44 PM

Good Fishing Article
 
http://www.cnn.com/2005/TRAVEL/DESTI....ap/index.html


EMERALD ISLE, North Carolina (AP) -- Pick a pier, any pier: Each of the more
than 20 fishing structures that extend hundreds of feet from the North
Carolina coast from Kill Devil Hills to Sunset Beach offers a cross-section
of anglers and their prey.

"You can see the different classes of fishermen as you look along the pier,"
said Emerald Isle fishing guide Richard Ehrenkaufer, who publishes a Web
guide to pier fishing under the pseudonym "Dr. Bogus."

"The spot and flounder fishermen are in close. A little farther out you get
the bluefish and Spanish mackerel and at the end you get the big game
fishermen," Ehrenkaufer said. "I've seen a 150-pound tarpon caught off the
end of a fishing pier."

For many, a trip to the pier stirs memories of a first fishing trip with Dad
or other relatives, when they gazed through the boards at the ocean below or
held the rod as a struggling fish was hauled up. To Ehrenkaufer's way of
thinking, the piers offer an "average Joe" experience for every one -- from
experienced game-fish anglers to wheelchair-bound fishermen closer in.

On a recent day at 1,000-foot-long Bogue Inlet Pier, equipment being used
ranged from discount store rod-and-reel sets to specialized surf gear hauled
in special carts with cooler racks and bait-cutting boards.

Mike Stanley, whose family has owned the pier since 1971, said an average
summer day draws about 200 paying customers, while the busy fall season can
bring crowds of 500 or more anglers to the pier.

For folks who love to fish but lack the resources to buy or charter a boat,
piers are the way to go, he said.

"Everybody gets access to be able to walk over the water," Stanley said.
"Boats are good because you can go to the fish if you know where they're at.
The pier is like a conveyor belt and you try to pick what's on the belt."

And for many beachgoers, a day on the pier is the best kind of vacation.

"Everybody talks about coming to the fishing pier," said Clara Flowers of
Kingston, N.C., as she sat on a bench at Bogue Inlet Pier, her rod propped
on the railing as she waited for a bite. "It's worth the drive to get away
and relax."

Flowers gets nostalgic as she remembers a day at Bogue Inlet that was so
good she "was pulling them in two at a time."

Regular Dale Collins enjoys the camaraderie among the pier anglers and said
he turned down a chance to go out in a boat that day. "When the fishing's
good inshore (within 3 miles of shore), you stand as good a chance as
fellows on a boat," Collins said.

Many piers charge a modest permit fee for anglers but are free to those who
just want to take a stroll or snap a family picture. Nearly all sell food,
drinks, fishing gear and bait and there's almost always someone willing to
help a novice looking for advice on technique.

For those family members not interested in landing fish, the beach is close
at hand.

Piers are "popular culture in North Carolina because they've been around for
decades," Ehrenkaufer said. "You can fish for anything from pan fish right
in the surf all the way to game fish at the end of the pier."

Ehrenkaufer worries that the days of fishing piers are numbered, as coastal
development makes the land they occupy so valuable that owners have little
choice but to sell. Before 1996, there were as many as 31 piers along the
North Carolina coast, he said. Storm damage and developers' high-dollar
offers have shrunk the number; along Bogue Banks alone at least three piers
have come down in the last decade.

And Stanley is concerned that a new salt water fishing license being created
by the state will require anyone who wants to fish from a pier to pay a
license fee, driving down business. He said the only way he sees the new
system working is if pier owners are allowed to pay a one-time license fee
that will cover all their customers and that they can recover through
admission fees.

At the end of the pier, Collins rinsed a bait bucket attached to a long rope
and lamented that his only catch of the day so far was a flounder too small
to keep. He brightened, though, recalling the day he paid an extra charge to
go to the special section of the pier where fishermen get more room to
battle game fish and landed a 43-pound cobia.

Asked how often he comes to the pier, he had an easy response: Any day "that
my wife doesn't have anything planned for me."



David H. Lipman August 12th, 2005 03:13 AM

From: "Jeff"

| http://www.cnn.com/2005/TRAVEL/DESTI....ap/index.html
|
| EMERALD ISLE, North Carolina (AP) -- Pick a pier, any pier: Each of the more
| than 20 fishing structures that extend hundreds of feet from the North
| Carolina coast from Kill Devil Hills to Sunset Beach offers a cross-section
| of anglers and their prey.
|
| "You can see the different classes of fishermen as you look along the pier,"
| said Emerald Isle fishing guide Richard Ehrenkaufer, who publishes a Web
| guide to pier fishing under the pseudonym "Dr. Bogus."
|
| "The spot and flounder fishermen are in close. A little farther out you get
| the bluefish and Spanish mackerel and at the end you get the big game
| fishermen," Ehrenkaufer said. "I've seen a 150-pound tarpon caught off the
| end of a fishing pier."
|
| For many, a trip to the pier stirs memories of a first fishing trip with Dad
| or other relatives, when they gazed through the boards at the ocean below or
| held the rod as a struggling fish was hauled up. To Ehrenkaufer's way of
| thinking, the piers offer an "average Joe" experience for every one -- from
| experienced game-fish anglers to wheelchair-bound fishermen closer in.
|
| On a recent day at 1,000-foot-long Bogue Inlet Pier, equipment being used
| ranged from discount store rod-and-reel sets to specialized surf gear hauled
| in special carts with cooler racks and bait-cutting boards.
|
| Mike Stanley, whose family has owned the pier since 1971, said an average
| summer day draws about 200 paying customers, while the busy fall season can
| bring crowds of 500 or more anglers to the pier.
|
| For folks who love to fish but lack the resources to buy or charter a boat,
| piers are the way to go, he said.
|
| "Everybody gets access to be able to walk over the water," Stanley said.
| "Boats are good because you can go to the fish if you know where they're at.
| The pier is like a conveyor belt and you try to pick what's on the belt."
|
| And for many beachgoers, a day on the pier is the best kind of vacation.
|
| "Everybody talks about coming to the fishing pier," said Clara Flowers of
| Kingston, N.C., as she sat on a bench at Bogue Inlet Pier, her rod propped
| on the railing as she waited for a bite. "It's worth the drive to get away
| and relax."
|
| Flowers gets nostalgic as she remembers a day at Bogue Inlet that was so
| good she "was pulling them in two at a time."
|
| Regular Dale Collins enjoys the camaraderie among the pier anglers and said
| he turned down a chance to go out in a boat that day. "When the fishing's
| good inshore (within 3 miles of shore), you stand as good a chance as
| fellows on a boat," Collins said.
|
| Many piers charge a modest permit fee for anglers but are free to those who
| just want to take a stroll or snap a family picture. Nearly all sell food,
| drinks, fishing gear and bait and there's almost always someone willing to
| help a novice looking for advice on technique.
|
| For those family members not interested in landing fish, the beach is close
| at hand.
|
| Piers are "popular culture in North Carolina because they've been around for
| decades," Ehrenkaufer said. "You can fish for anything from pan fish right
| in the surf all the way to game fish at the end of the pier."
|
| Ehrenkaufer worries that the days of fishing piers are numbered, as coastal
| development makes the land they occupy so valuable that owners have little
| choice but to sell. Before 1996, there were as many as 31 piers along the
| North Carolina coast, he said. Storm damage and developers' high-dollar
| offers have shrunk the number; along Bogue Banks alone at least three piers
| have come down in the last decade.
|
| And Stanley is concerned that a new salt water fishing license being created
| by the state will require anyone who wants to fish from a pier to pay a
| license fee, driving down business. He said the only way he sees the new
| system working is if pier owners are allowed to pay a one-time license fee
| that will cover all their customers and that they can recover through
| admission fees.
|
| At the end of the pier, Collins rinsed a bait bucket attached to a long rope
| and lamented that his only catch of the day so far was a flounder too small
| to keep. He brightened, though, recalling the day he paid an extra charge to
| go to the special section of the pier where fishermen get more room to
| battle game fish and landed a 43-pound cobia.
|
| Asked how often he comes to the pier, he had an easy response: Any day "that
| my wife doesn't have anything planned for me."
|

I love Spanish Mackerel !

My biggest was 31" and boy they are good eats !
Too bad they aren't abundant here on the Jersey Shore.

--
Dave
http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html
http://www.ik-cs.com/got-a-virus.htm




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